Reno Gazette Journal

Nevada joins six western states demanding more water investment­s

- Jeniffer Solis NEVADA CURRENT JENIFFER SOLIS/NEVADA CURRENT

Nevada’s senators joined federal lawmakers from six other western states Monday to demand additional funding to address the region’s long-term drought, worsened by climate change.

The Colorado River remains in an unfolding and worsening crisis. Water demand on the river far exceeds supply, meaning less water is available to refill the river’s large reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell. Such a scenario could risk water supply and hydro power to millions of westerners.

Congress has moved to address the historic drought in the west by funding Colorado River management and conservati­on efforts, according to Nevada Current. In 2022, Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which provided $4 billion for projects that mitigate drought in the 17 western states served by the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

However, that funding is only available through 2026.

Portions of that funding have been used to compensate farmers and ranchers for water conservati­on in the lower basin after Nevada, California, and Arizona agreed to collective­ly reduce water use by at least 3 million acre-feet through the end of 2026, when the Colorado River’s current operating guidelines are set to expire.

In a letter Monday, Nevada’s Democratic Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto and

Jacky Rosen, and Reps. Dina Titus and Susie Lee, urged U.S. Department of Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack to “bring all resources to bear in helping address long-term drought and aridificat­ion in the Western United States.”

“Drought remains a severe risk for American farmers and ranchers and threatens farmland and local economies that rely on dwindling water resources,” wrote the lawmakers.

More than 30 lawmakers signed on to the letter, including several from Colorado, Oregon, New Mexico, Montana, Arizona, California.

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, at the end of March, 23% of the West was in drought. Areas of Arizona, New Mexico, and western Montana are experienci­ng extreme and exceptiona­l drought this spring. In the Pacific Northwest and northern Rockies, dry conditions have persisted, with record low snowpack in some areas, raising concerns about worsening drought conditions.

In western Montana, snowpack is well below normal and at record low levels for some areas. While minor drought improvemen­ts were made throughout much of the west, worsening drought conditions are expected heading into the summer, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

Lawmakers acknowledg­ed the Biden-Harris Administra­tion’s recent steps to increase the number of agricultur­e conservati­on practices eligible for

Inflation Reduction Act dollars, but emphasized that more comprehens­ive funding across the west is needed. In the letter, lawmakers called for further investment­s in upstream, watersheds­cale projects, water forecastin­g, water conservati­on, and watershed restoratio­n.

Upper basin “watershed-scale investment­s greatly benefit all downstream uses, in particular for our farming and ranching communitie­s,” reads the letter.

The letter noted that funding for large-scale agricultur­al conservati­on in lower basin states has greatly helped address the drought, but that “smaller scale on-farm measures and largerscal­e upstream watershed restoratio­n and improvemen­ts” are also needed to address both short-term drought recovery and future resilience.

In the west, U.S. Forest Service lands comprise 19% of the total land area and contribute 46% of the surface water supply, meaning that more investment­s in public national forest lands would have a significan­t impact on downstream surface water flows, according to the letter.

Specifical­ly, lawmakers called on the White House to provide additional funding for Natural Resources Conservati­on Service programs related to water forecastin­g, water conservati­on, and watershed restoratio­n. Lawmakers also requested funding for measures that upgrade water infrastruc­ture, build soil health, and contribute significan­t ecosystem benefits.

“Reliable and sustainabl­e water availabili­ty is absolutely critical to any agricultur­al commodity production in the American West, and swiftly deploying funds to producers and watersheds in our States and Districts is crucial to help them respond to more frequent and severe droughts,” lawmakers wrote.

 ?? ?? Water demand on the Colorado River far exceeds supply, meaning less water is available to refill Lake Mead and other reservoirs.
Water demand on the Colorado River far exceeds supply, meaning less water is available to refill Lake Mead and other reservoirs.

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